Top News
Former B.C. Conservative Boultbee crosses to NDP, calling out 'Trump-style populism'

Former B.C. Conservative Boultbee crosses to NDP, calling out 'Trump-style populism'

Former Conservative member of the British Columbia legislature Amelia Boultbee, who left the caucus to sit as an Independent, is now a member of the governing New Democrats. Boultbee, who won her seat as a B.C. Conservative by narrowly edging out an NDP opponent by a few hundred votes, told a joint news conference with Premier David Eby on Friday...

Hoekstra's comments on Gordie Howe bridge 'a punch in the face', says ex-Harper communications chief

Hoekstra's comments on Gordie Howe bridge 'a punch in the face', says ex-Harper communications chief

Canada footing the bill for the bridge 'is the big myth that is out there,' Hoekstra said. Pete Hoekstra’s claim that Canada paying to construct the Gordie Howe International Bridge is a “big myth” has been branded “a punch in the face” by former Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s director of communications. Article content Andrew MacDougall, who held the role when...

Hoekstra says no 'significant progress' in 14 months of trade negotiations, but U.S. to keep talking

Hoekstra says no 'significant progress' in 14 months of trade negotiations, but U.S. to keep talking

'Hopefully on a number of these issues we reach resolution sooner rather than later,' U.S. ambassador said. The U.S. envoy to Canada says 14 months of trade talk between Canada and the Trump administration has resolved few issues, but insists the Americans will keep talking in the hopes of striking an agreement on the future of CUSMA, as well as...

Guilbeault says he ‘respectfully disagrees’ with PM Carney over pipeline project

Guilbeault says he ‘respectfully disagrees’ with PM Carney over pipeline project

Former environment and climate change minister Steven Guilbeault is pushing back on Prime Minister Mark Carney’s assessment that a new pipeline will be profitable for all Canadians. “I respectfully disagree with the prime minister,” Guilbeault said in an interview with CTV News Channel on Friday. “Yes, there is money coming from the TMX pipeline, but for this to be profitable...

Carney to meet Saudi crown prince as Canada pursues closer ties

Carney to meet Saudi crown prince as Canada pursues closer ties

Prime Minister Mark Carney will meet next week with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom’s de facto ruler, but federal officials would not say whether the prime minister plans to raise human rights concerns during the visit. At a background briefing ahead of the trip, officials would only point to Carney’s past comments on the issue. “The Prime...

Polls

Section Sponsor

This section is sponsored by Canada's mining companies.
Canadians split on Alto High-Speed Rail as a Government priority

Canadians split on Alto High-Speed Rail as a Government priority

Nanos was retained to conduct research to gauge the views of Canadians on the importance of the Alto High-Speed Rail Project as a government priority.

Low provincial government satisfaction levels reflected in voter intentions across Atlantic Canada.

Low provincial government satisfaction levels reflected in voter intentions across Atlantic Canada.

Provincial Government Performance: Results of Narrative Research’s most recent Atlantic Quarterly© survey show that Atlantic Canadians’ satisfaction with their respective provincial government’s performance is low. In both PEI and Nova Scotia, a majority are dissatisfied with their provincial government’s performance (55% and 59%, respectively). In New Brunswick and Newfoundland & Labrador, opinions are more divided between those who are satisfied...



Opinion

More
Canada's Greatest Competitive Advantage Isn't AI. It's Talent.
Canada and America were born in different ways. Even today, it shows

Canada and America were born in different ways. Even today, it shows

Canada’s national holiday and America’s fall within a few days of each other, yet celebrate two very different things. Each celebrates their respective country’s birth, of course, but they define this in different ways. The American commemorates a breach, an abrupt and indeed violent rupture with the imperial power; the Canadian, the date scheduled for its inception as a federal...

News

More
Alberta submits plans and announces partners for new pipeline to B.C. coast

Alberta submits plans and announces partners for new pipeline to B.C. coast

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced Thursday that her government has a route - and builders - for a new pipeline to the B.C. coast, just hours after Prime Minister Mark Carney announced a deal with B.C. to make it possible. Smith and Carney stood together in Calgary to announce that Alberta has formally submitted a proposed route to Ottawa's major...

NDP's Nenshi supportive of public cash for Alberta pipeline, wants honesty from Smith

NDP's Nenshi supportive of public cash for Alberta pipeline, wants honesty from Smith

Alberta's Opposition NDP leader says Premier Danielle Smith's plan for a new pipeline has his support, but he's calling on her to be honest about how much taxpayers could be on the hook for.



Opinion (Continued) More

Restoring 24 Sussex is worthy, but Ottawa shouldn’t be competing for charity dollars to do it

Restoring 24 Sussex is worthy, but Ottawa shouldn’t be competing for charity dollars to do it

Prime Minister Mark Carney deserves credit for doing the thing that prime ministers before him have been too pusillanimous to do for decades. While it shouldn’t be politically risky, really, to spend some money to refurbish the official residence of the Prime Minister ‐ which has been inhabited only by mice and insects for the last 10 years – this...

Premier Smith launches pipeline, but B.C. wins the pot

Premier Smith launches pipeline, but B.C. wins the pot

Mark Carney makes $17 billion in infrastructure pledges to B.C. on same day door opens to pipeline from Alberta to tidewater

Danielle Smith sees pipeline win, feels Alberta is now a long way from Trudeau

Danielle Smith sees pipeline win, feels Alberta is now a long way from Trudeau

Right after Alberta Premier Danielle Smith rolls out her pipeline plans to the country Thursday night she heads off to the Cowboys Music Festival. As the premier makes her way to Cowboys she sounds very happy. She is not claiming victory when the goal line is still down the field. But she and her government have clearly moved the yardsticks...

In Ankara, Trump May Not be NATO’s Biggest Problem

In Ankara, Trump May Not be NATO’s Biggest Problem

On July 6th and 7th, NATO leaders will gather at the presidential palace in Ankara for their annual summit. As at every heads-of-government meeting at which the United States is present these days, all eyes will be on Donald Trump. Will he berate his fellow leaders for refusing to support the United States in its Iranian misadventure? Will he announce...

At 250 years old, America is barely recognizable

At 250 years old, America is barely recognizable

In a recent appearance at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum, U.S. Vice-President JD Vance opened up about his admiration for the disgraced former Republican leader. In particular, Mr. Vance wanted to express his outrage over the fate Mr. Nixon met for his involvement in the Watergate scandal that ultimately forced his resignation as president in 1974. “If Watergate...

It’s time Canada cut diplomatic ties with Israel

It’s time Canada cut diplomatic ties with Israel

Israel’s right to defend itself “does not grant us the right to oppress others,” the Israeli newspaper Haaretz once warned in an editorial. Seizing new land requires ruling that land, and rule without representation brings resistance. In turn, it continued, “resistance brings in its wake oppression. Oppression brings in its wake terrorism and counterterrorism.”



There is more bad news coming for separatists in Alberta

There is more bad news coming for separatists in Alberta

When the Alberta government announced the makeup of what was to be an impartial panel examining the economic cost of independence, a couple of the names raised eyebrows. Ted Morton would be taking part. The former provincial finance minister was a signatory to the infamous “firewall letter” that was published in 2001 and called for greater Alberta autonomy in Canada...

Carney’s condo controversy is a warning about two of his biggest liabilities

Carney’s condo controversy is a warning about two of his biggest liabilities

Mark Carney has only himself to blame, for the controversy that erupted last week when he announced a half-baked plan to buy up vacant condominiums. But the blowback, as strong as any he’s faced since becoming prime minister, may ultimately prove a blessing in disguise both for him and for the country

The Liberals are finally getting things right on national defence under Carney

The Liberals are finally getting things right on national defence under Carney

For all the ills former prime minister Justin Trudeau left his successor to face, the defence file has been a surprising bright spot. What makes this all the more remarkable is the fact that just 30 months ago, the then-head of the Royal Canadian Navy took to YouTube to declare that his team and equipment were in a “critical state.”...

Who does Mark Carney think we are, anyway?

Who does Mark Carney think we are, anyway?

The Prime Minister has been telling a gleaming story about Canada, but is avoiding the dark clouds gathering ahead

Mark Carney and Donald Trump offer revealing birthday gifts to their countries

Mark Carney and Donald Trump offer revealing birthday gifts to their countries

Mark Carney’s newest video, released just in time for Canada Day, is a sober affair, giving the nation some hard truths as a 159th birthday present. The climate plans of Justin Trudeau’s years have to be ratcheted back; the world is a dangerous place and trust is a rarer commodity in that world than oil.

Budget? What budget? Mark Carney’s novel solution for repairing 24 Sussex Drive

Budget? What budget? Mark Carney’s novel solution for repairing 24 Sussex Drive

How far will Canada’s prime ministers go to avoid headlines with a multimillion-dollar figure attached to the words “24 Sussex Drive”? Embarrassingly far.



Mark Carney has talked about ‘Canada Strong.’ But this is how we’ll actually figure out what it means to be Canadian

Mark Carney has talked about ‘Canada Strong.’ But this is how we’ll actually figure out what it means to be Canadian

It’s been nearly 160 years, and we’ve yet to fully figure out what it means to be Canadian. Just flip back through the archives of this paper and you’ll find a history of hand-wringing about that fact. The constant pull from south of the border, a Star editorial argued in 1976, “requires an answer to reinforce Canada’s will for cultural...

Why Canada Day is my favourite holiday

Why Canada Day is my favourite holiday

Canada Day is my favourite holiday of the year. I’m serious. Ask my wife. We’ve debated Christmas versus Canada Day many times and I’m holding firm. It isn’t because I was minister of Canadian Heritage at one point and it seems obligatory or because I’m a sappy nationalist. It is because I genuinely love Canada and I love that we...

Le Canada, mon pays

Le Canada, mon pays

In my column last week, I focused on why I love Quebec, as well as assessing some of its flaws. I quoted former Quebec premier Jean Lesage, who described his attachment to his homeland and his country as “Le Québec, ma patrie—le Canada, mon pays.” This week, for Canada Day, I thought I would articulate the strengths and weaknesses of...

The Conservatives’ critic shuffle is a sign of maturity

The Conservatives’ critic shuffle is a sign of maturity

Shuffles of the opposition front bench – the roster of critics, or as the Conservatives prefer, shadow ministers, assigned to dog the government ministers for their respective portfolios – rarely excite much notice. That has been especially true of the Conservatives under Pierre Poilievre: partly because there are so many critics (83, in the current incarnation, including shadow associate ministers...

Avi Lewis and the dark path of the far left

Avi Lewis and the dark path of the far left

Is Canada ready to surf a socialist wave? After the shock victories of three hard-left candidates in last week’s U.S. Democratic primaries, voters and their leaders may wonder whether our country could elect the likes of “democratic socialists” Darializa Avila Chevalier, Brad Lander and Claire Valdez. Chevalier is particularly radical: in a since-deleted X post she wrote “I forgot to...

Will this be Carney's summer of love for major projects?

Will this be Carney's summer of love for major projects?

It should come as no surprise that Canada's prime minister would go to bat for national unity, but it remains unclear exactly how Mark Carney's determination will manifest itself in Alberta. At his end-of-sitting news conference last week, Carney vowed to make the case for Canada and use the summer months to convince Albertans that things are improving, and that...



Mark Carney’s Canada Day Speech: No Pressure, Prime Minister

Mark Carney’s Canada Day Speech: No Pressure, Prime Minister

As many Canadians brace for a Canada Day heat wave, we have good news and bad news for you to ponder while you’re raiding the icepack, AC, and oscillating-fan sections at Canadian Tire. The good news is that Canada’s “technical recession” of a month ago is now, per BMO Chef Economist and Policy Contributing Writer Doug Porter, a technical recovery...

Shifting stories and questionable connections call for a probe of Carney’s condo bailout

Shifting stories and questionable connections call for a probe of Carney’s condo bailout

In the 2015 British election, the Labour party campaign team underlined their commitment to keeping their promises by literally carving them in stone. Article content When the leader, the hapless Ed Miliband, showed up to unveil the eight-foot-tall limestone slab, he turned to his spin doctor and said: “Bob, doesn’t it look a bit like a gravestone?”

We’re stepping up, we’re doing the thing, let’s do all the things

We’re stepping up, we’re doing the thing, let’s do all the things

Canada is buying a sophisticated radar system from our friends in Australia … at a speed not seen in generations, and all that jazz. First, the news: Canada will spend $2.6-billion to procure an “over-the-horizon” radar system that will (hopefully!) allow anything approaching North America from the North—aircraft, missile, or drone—to be tracked at long ranges. The Australian system is...

The big-tech backlash is coming. Canada's leaders aren't ready for it

The big-tech backlash is coming. Canada's leaders aren't ready for it

As a headline writer, you’re essentially in the business of getting people’s attention. The team at the Globe and Mail certainly hit that mark with a recent column titled “SpaceX IPO makes Elon Musk the first trillionaire. Here’s how to properly hate him.” This spurred all sorts of noisy pushback from Canada’s tech elite, with Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke suggesting...

Separation Summer? Carney’s Real Test May be FDI Fall

Separation Summer? Carney’s Real Test May be FDI Fall

As we approach the Canada Day launch of summer, much of the attention on Prime Minister Mark Carney and the challenges facing his government is focused on the fate of the CUSMA trade deal and Alberta’s future. But there is another event on the horizon that could both deliver disproportionate impact on these ongoing policy and political files and provide...

The Gordie Howe bridge is still closed and Trump won’t open it. What that says about “Fortress North America”

The Gordie Howe bridge is still closed and Trump won’t open it. What that says about “Fortress North America”

Donald Trump has made the Gordie Howe International Bridge into a big, beautiful monument to the futility of trying to jointly advance the economic interests of his country and ours. There are so many reasons for Canadians to be furious about Trump blocking the bridge’s opening: the pain to industries that need a faster crossing at the Windsor-Detroit border, the...

News (Continued) More

Cheers and jeers: Alberta Premier rolls through Calgary in Stampede parade

Cheers and jeers: Alberta Premier rolls through Calgary in Stampede parade

CALGARY -- Alberta Premier Danielle Smith rolled through downtown Calgary today in the city's largest annual parade to light applause and occasional cheers and jeers.

Ottawa to weigh guardrails, alternatives to 'contentious' Labour Code tool: Hajdu

Ottawa to weigh guardrails, alternatives to 'contentious' Labour Code tool: Hajdu

OTTAWA -- The federal government is exploring possible guardrails or alternatives to using what she says is a "contentious" section of the Labour Code that allows Ottawa to intervene in bitter bargaining conflicts, Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu said this week.

Anti-coal mining petition led by musician Corb Lund fails in Alberta

Anti-coal mining petition led by musician Corb Lund fails in Alberta

EDMONTON -- Elections Alberta says a petition calling for a ban on new coal mining in the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains, spearheaded by musician and activist Corb Lund, has failed.

Not our job to ensure border patrol helicopter could fly in Canada, RCMP says

Not our job to ensure border patrol helicopter could fly in Canada, RCMP says

The RCMP says it wasn’t its job to ensure its newest border patrol helicopter was allowed to fly in Canada, even as it defends paying for the Black Hawk it can’t use after it was grounded because of concerns from Transport Canada. The Mounties also won’t reveal the cost of the daily fees they are paying towards the $7.5-million contract...

Canada paying to construct Gordie Howe bridge is 'big myth', according to Ambassador Pete Hoekstra

Canada paying to construct Gordie Howe bridge is 'big myth', according to Ambassador Pete Hoekstra

The opening of the Gordie Howe bridge is stalled because the U.S. wants to review the impact of construction costs and delays on revenue-sharing, according to U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra. Hoekstra said that Canada footing the bill for the bridge “is the big myth that is out there … I think it’s important that people realize this, okay...

Ottawa must act against U.S. efforts to deter Canadian business in Cuba, advocates say

Ottawa must act against U.S. efforts to deter Canadian business in Cuba, advocates say

A Cuban Canadian advocacy group is calling on the federal government to enable businesses to conduct work with Cuba as the island struggles under a renewed blockade from the United States. In a statement on its website, the Canadian Network on Cuba (CNC) said the UN General Assembly has “overwhelmingly” has condemned the U.S. and its actions against the Caribbean...

Canadians divided over Alto high-speed rail as government priority: Nanos survey

Canadians divided over Alto high-speed rail as government priority: Nanos survey

Canadians are evenly split on whether they believe the proposed Alto high-speed rail project should be a government priority, according to the latest data from Nanos Research, commissioned by CTV News. The multi-billion-dollar infrastructure project would connect Quebec City to Toronto and promises to cut travel times between those cities in half. The federal government recently concluded its 100-day public...

Quarterly payments of Ottawa’s boosted grocery and essentials benefit start today

Quarterly payments of Ottawa’s boosted grocery and essentials benefit start today

Eligible Canadians will find a bit more cash in their bank accounts starting today as quarterly payments begin for the federal Liberals’ boosted affordability benefit. The Canada Groceries and Essentials Benefit is paid out to lower-income households every three months and was previously called the GST/HST credit. Eligible households got a one-time payment worth 50 per cent of the benefit’s...

Canada’s foreign influence registry expected to launch in early August

Canada’s foreign influence registry expected to launch in early August

The Canadian government’s foreign influence registry will come into force in early August, bringing into being a long-promised, long-delayed tool for tracking the activities of agents of foreign states. An order-in-council recently issued by Prime Minister Mark Carney’s cabinet reveals for the first time that the government has fixed Aug. 4 as the date. People and entities working on behalf...

New pipeline from Alberta to B.C. coast to be built as a private-public partnership

New pipeline from Alberta to B.C. coast to be built as a private-public partnership

Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith have announced plans to build a new pipeline from Alberta to the British Columbia coast as a private public partnership. This is “an approach that gives certainty to our businesses to build,” said Carney, who made the announcement at a press conference with Smith in Calgary Thursday evening. “Canada and Alberta...

New pipeline route will travel through Kamloops on existing Trans Mountain line: Carney

New pipeline route will travel through Kamloops on existing Trans Mountain line: Carney

A new pipeline from Alberta to the B.C. coast will run through Kamloops, potentially bringing years of construction work and hundreds of millions of dollars in spending to the city. Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced Thursday that the project has been referred to Canada's Major Projects Office. “We’ve agreed that the best route for a...

Pride brings focus on ‘two different kinds of Conservatives’
U.S. flags concerns over Canada’s ties to China as it blocks CUSMA renewal

U.S. flags concerns over Canada’s ties to China as it blocks CUSMA renewal

The United States’ top trade official is pointing to Canada’s deepening economic ties with China as one of the reasons Washington is refusing to renew the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on free trade (CUSMA) in its current form. Speaking to Global News on Thursday, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said the White House is concerned Beijing could use Canada as a back...

Canada, Philippines sign sectoral agreements during Marcos visit to Vancouver

Canada, Philippines sign sectoral agreements during Marcos visit to Vancouver

Canada and the Philippines signed agreements today on energy, natural resources, labour and tourism, during a high-level visit in Vancouver. Prime Minister Mark Carney welcomed Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to Canada, in the first visit of the country's head of state in more than a decade.

Poilievre says Ottawa needs to 'get out of the way' and approve a pipeline proposal from Alberta

Poilievre says Ottawa needs to 'get out of the way' and approve a pipeline proposal from Alberta

Alberta was set to unveil more details about its proposed oil pipeline to B.C. coast this afternoon

BC.'s multibillion-dollar MOU with feds retains northern tanker ban

BC.'s multibillion-dollar MOU with feds retains northern tanker ban

British Columbia and the federal government have unveiled a multibillion-dollar agreement that will maintain the northern oil tanker ban, eliminating the possibility of an oil pipeline from Alberta to B.C.'s northern coast. But the memorandum of understanding unveiled by Prime Minister Mark Carney and Premier David Eby in Vancouver on Thursday also acknowledges Canada’s agreement with Alberta on a trans-provincial...

Carney to join Smith for Alberta oil pipeline update in Calgary today

Carney to join Smith for Alberta oil pipeline update in Calgary today

Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith are set to hold a joint news conference today in Calgary on a proposed pipeline project. Smith had set a July 1 deadline to submit a proposal for a new pipeline to the federal major projects office for possible fast tracking under Carney’s national building plan.

Alberta to propose southern route for new West Coast pipeline, sources say

Alberta to propose southern route for new West Coast pipeline, sources say

The Alberta government will propose a southern route for its new oil pipeline to the West Coast, relenting on its insistence that a conduit to the Pacific be routed to B.C.’s northern coast, three government and industry sources say. Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has said from the start of the planning that the new, one-million-barrel-a-day pipeline should run to a...

Carney, Eby to announce 'multi-billion-dollar' agreement ahead of Alberta's pipeline update

Carney, Eby to announce 'multi-billion-dollar' agreement ahead of Alberta's pipeline update

Announcement comes as Premier David Eby is scheduled to be in China for trade mission. B.C. Premier David Eby and Prime Minister Mark Carney are set to make an announcement Thursday on what the premier's office called "a new multi-billion-dollar agreement that will power decades of job growth and prosperity." The announcement is scheduled for 10:15 a.m. PT.

Alberta government to announce details for West Coast pipeline proposal

Alberta government to announce details for West Coast pipeline proposal

Province wants pipeline to be designated as project of national interest. The Alberta government is expected to announce details on Thursday regarding its proposal to build a new oil pipeline stretching to the West Coast. In a memorandum of understanding signed by Ottawa and Alberta in the fall, the province was initially given a July 1 deadline to submit its...

Ambassador says Carney's Davos speech is being put into practice at UN

Ambassador says Carney's Davos speech is being put into practice at UN

Prime Minister Mark Carney's vision of middle powers working with less traditional partners outside the superpower club is already taking shape at the United Nations, says Canada's ambassador. "We have set up a number of different kinds of relationships that work for specific issues," said David Lametti, Canada's ambassador to the UN. "And that's precisely the manner in which I...

Alberta update on West Coast oil pipeline postponed

Alberta update on West Coast oil pipeline postponed

The Alberta government has postponed a planned update on its planned million-barrel-a-day oil pipeline to the West Coast. A news conference with Premier Danielle Smith had been scheduled for this morning, but it has been delayed to later in the day. Smith inked an agreement with Prime Minister Mark Carney last fall, and their memorandum of understanding pledges to pave...

U.S. not renewing trade agreement with Canada and Mexico in 'current form'

U.S. not renewing trade agreement with Canada and Mexico in 'current form'

The United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer says the U.S. is not renewing the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement "in its current form" — but the trade agreement will remain in place as negotiations continue. "The United States will continue to engage with Mexico and Canada to address the Agreement’s shortcomings and our trade deficits with these countries," Greer said in a statement...

Carney praises connection in a 'divided world' as Canada Day celebrations underway

Carney praises connection in a 'divided world' as Canada Day celebrations underway

U.S. trade pressures and Alberta separatist sentiments remain on Canadians' minds. Prime Minister Mark Carney is hammering home a message of unity and connection this Canada Day. Speaking at a Canada Day event in Ottawa, Carney praised "the courage that Canadians ... have shown in the face of a more dangerous and divided world." "If courage is how we must...

Poll: Canadian patriotism was fading. Then Trump came back.

Poll: Canadian patriotism was fading. Then Trump came back.

As they celebrate their national day, Canadians feel a renewed sense of national pride — a reversal of a stubborn trend that dates back at least 40 years. All it took was an unpredictable and aggressive next-door neighbor whose sovereignty threats and trade war left a lasting mark.

‘Unshakeable foundation’: Carney celebrates unity in Canada Day address

‘Unshakeable foundation’: Carney celebrates unity in Canada Day address

In his yearly Canada Day message, Prime Minister Mark Carney spoke on unity, kindness and strength, as his government continues to face challenges to Canada’s sovereignty, both from within the country, and outside of it. In the two-and-a-half-minute address, Carney celebrated the beauty and diversity of the country’s landscape and people. He stressed that in 1867, when four colonies became...

'Canada gave us a free bridge': California Congressman adds voice to open the Gordie Howe bridge chorus

'Canada gave us a free bridge': California Congressman adds voice to open the Gordie Howe bridge chorus

The issue of the finished-but-not-yet-opened Gordie Howe International Bridge continues to create ripples on both sides of the U.S.-Canada border, and far from the Michigan-Ontario crossing that is its epicentre. Among the more recent statements comes from Mike Levin, the Democratic incumbent from California’s 49th congressional district, serving in the U.S. House of Representatives since 2019.

Canada will enter the 2027 Eurovision Song Contest

Canada will enter the 2027 Eurovision Song Contest

Today is the day fans of over-the-top talent shows and campy musical performances have been waiting for: Canada is entering the 2027 Eurovision Song Contest. The announcement was made by CBC/Radio-Canada and the European Broadcasting Union less than a week after confirming CBC had become a full member of the EBU. "On this Canada Day, as we celebrate with Canadians...

Old emission plan would have been ‘opportunity’ to ‘pull Canada apart’: Carney

Old emission plan would have been ‘opportunity’ to ‘pull Canada apart’: Carney

As Prime Minister Mark Carney attempts to make Canada an energy superpower, he is conceding for the first time that the country’s greenhouse gas emissions will be “higher in the next few years” than projected under the previous government’s plan. The admission came in his second “Forward Guidance” video address to Canadians released on Tuesday. “In my judgement, that plan...

Regulator launches inquiry into contentious fees charged by Rogers, Bell and Telus

Regulator launches inquiry into contentious fees charged by Rogers, Bell and Telus

Canada's telecom regulator has launched a formal inquiry into wireless fees charged by Rogers Communications, Bell Canada and Telus Communications, claiming the charges appear to violate new consumer protection rules. In a public notice posted Tuesday, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) ordered Canada's three largest telecom companies to justify their contentious fees and explain why they shouldn't face...



US Poli

More
Trump and Republicans return to communist attacks against Democrats ahead of the midterm elections

Trump and Republicans return to communist attacks against Democrats ahead of the midterm elections

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump and his fellow Republicans are reviving a line of attack against Democrats heading into the midterm elections: They're communists.

Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship, rejecting Trump's restrictions

Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship, rejecting Trump's restrictions

The Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld a broad conception of birthright citizenship, rejecting President Donald Trump's executive order declaring that children born to parents who are in the United States illegally or temporarily are not American citizens.

Supreme Court upholds trans athlete bans

Supreme Court upholds trans athlete bans

The Supreme Court on Tuesday will rule on the constitutionality of President Donald Trump's order on birthright citizenship declaring that children born to parents who are in the United States illegally or temporarily are not American citizens.

Supreme Court rules states can count late-arriving mailed ballots, rejecting Trump-led challenge

Supreme Court rules states can count late-arriving mailed ballots, rejecting Trump-led challenge

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court on Monday ruled that states can count ballots that arrive after Election Day, a persistent target of President Donald Trump.

International

More
Carney to meet Saudi crown prince as Canada pursues closer ties

Carney to meet Saudi crown prince as Canada pursues closer ties

Prime Minister Mark Carney will meet next week with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom’s de facto ruler, but federal officials would not say whether the prime minister plans to raise human rights concerns during the visit. At a background briefing ahead of the trip, officials would only point to Carney’s past comments on the issue. “The Prime...

Ottawa must act against U.S. efforts to deter Canadian business in Cuba, advocates say

Ottawa must act against U.S. efforts to deter Canadian business in Cuba, advocates say

A Cuban Canadian advocacy group is calling on the federal government to enable businesses to conduct work with Cuba as the island struggles under a renewed blockade from the United States. In a statement on its website, the Canadian Network on Cuba (CNC) said the UN General Assembly has “overwhelmingly” has condemned the U.S. and its actions against the Caribbean...

Ambassador says Carney's Davos speech is being put into practice at UN

Ambassador says Carney's Davos speech is being put into practice at UN

Prime Minister Mark Carney's vision of middle powers working with less traditional partners outside the superpower club is already taking shape at the United Nations, says Canada's ambassador. "We have set up a number of different kinds of relationships that work for specific issues," said David Lametti, Canada's ambassador to the UN. "And that's precisely the manner in which I...

Israel withdrawing defence attaché from embassy in Canada

Israel withdrawing defence attaché from embassy in Canada

Israel’s defence attaché is departing for home and will not be replaced at the country’s embassy in Canada – a sign, experts say, of an erosion of bilateral relations with Ottawa as ties remain strained over Gaza. Colonel Ilan Or is returning to Israel at the end of July, the embassy said. The responsibilities will be taken over by a...

Canada has no plans to open embassies in Iran or Venezuela, Anand says

Canada has no plans to open embassies in Iran or Venezuela, Anand says

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says Canada has no current plans to open embassies in Iran or Venezuela. Anand says Canada relies on Italy to connect with Canadians in Iran but admits using an intermediary isn't the most efficient way of dealing with consular issues. Her comments come after a group called the Iranian Justice Collective said it had heard...

Think Tank

More
Explainer: The Risks and Rewards of BYD’s EV Investment in Canada

Explainer: The Risks and Rewards of BYD’s EV Investment in Canada

China’s BYD has emerged as one of the most consequential companies in the global automotive transition. Once known primarily as a battery producer, it is now the world’s largest seller of battery-electric vehicles and a major producer of plug-in hybrids, batteries, and energy-storage systems. BYD’s combination of low-cost vehicles, technological innovation, and control over much of its supply chain has...

Cracks in the ice: Power, propaganda, and Russia’s nuclear icebreakers

Cracks in the ice: Power, propaganda, and Russia’s nuclear icebreakers

For Canada and its allies and partners, the main response to Russian claims of Arctic dominance is to see through their own icebreaker and Arctic economic development plans.


Substacks

More

A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

Who Benefits When Alberta’s Energy Sector Expands? The Answer May Surprise You – Again

Who Benefits When Alberta’s Energy Sector Expands? The Answer May Surprise You – Again

In 1995 the Canadian economy was not exactly humming along – it still hadn’t got its mojo back after the severe 1990-92 recession. The unemployment rate was 9.5%, GDP per capita had only just made it back to the level of 1989, and steep spending cuts in Paul Martin’s February budget signaled more contraction.

Numbers to replace names on RCMP badges

Numbers to replace names on RCMP badges

The name tags that RCMP officers are required to wear for identification no longer have to display their actual names, a move intended to protect them from digital bad actors. In a significant amendment to the Mounties’ Uniform Dress Manual, regular members now can choose to display only their regimental numbers rather than their names.

Sage Roundtable: Canada’s Welfare State Was Built for a World That No Longer Exists. Boomers Got the Deal — Will Anyone Else?

Sage Roundtable: Canada’s Welfare State Was Built for a World That No Longer Exists. Boomers Got the Deal — Will Anyone Else?

Today’s Roundtable discussion began with an email from former Bank of Canada governor and deputy minister of finance David Dodge to fellow Sage contributors. David posed this question and observation: “Can Canada still afford the welfare state we built in the 1960s when domestic productivity, labour force growth and investment were high and the global economic conditions were favourable? In...

Podcasts

Section Sponsor

Booze, fights, and a three-foot salmon: tales from Canada’s parliamentary past, with Charlie Feldman

Booze, fights, and a three-foot salmon: tales from Canada’s parliamentary past, with Charlie Feldman

Peter Mazereeuw recaps Prime Minister Mark Carney's pipeline deal with Alberta and his infrastructure agreement with British Columbia, then speaks with guest Charlie Feldman about his new book on the history of bad behaviour and strange happenings in Canada's Parliament—Unparliamentary: Tales from Canada's Colourful Parliamentary Past.

The Numbers: New Leaders Draft

The Numbers: New Leaders Draft

With the start of another summer, it’s time to think about new beginnings — for political parties! This week, we’re doing something we haven’t done before. Every December, we draft the party leaders we think will be heading into the sunset. Now, in this first post-Canada Day episode, we’re drafting leaders who we say will be newly installed at the...

Patriotism gets a Canadian reset | POLITICO’s pollster brings the numbers

Patriotism gets a Canadian reset | POLITICO’s pollster brings the numbers

A new POLITICO international poll finds voters everywhere fed up with their incumbents. Not in Canada. Nick Taylor-Vaisey and Mickey Djuric talk to Seb Wride of Public First about why Mark Carney is bucking the trend, why Canadians are loving the flag again after years of treating it as a loaded symbol, and why Albertans rank among the proudest Canadians...

After 250 years of living next to the U.S., what’s next?

After 250 years of living next to the U.S., what’s next?

Canada and the U.S. share more than July birthdays. Between them is the world’s longest international land border, more than $3 billion in trade daily and they’re longtime partners in defence and security. The relationship is now being tested like few times in its history by U.S. President Donald Trump’s threats and tariffs. What do past pivotal moments in Canadian-American...